Finesse and Fury from the Canton
Symphony
By Tom Wachunas
It is always something of a letdown when
Maestro Gerhardt Zimmermann doesn’t preface
a program selection at a Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO) concert with his
special brand of wit, sardonic or otherwise. Ever the engaging raconteur, he
didn’t disappoint on the occasion of the December 2 performance at Umstattd
Hall.
One of the unique elements in this concert,
billed as Audience Choice, was that
the three program selections were chosen from a list voted upon by loyal CSO
subscribers. The list consisted of three overtures, three piano concertos, and
three symphonies which Zimmermann offered for consideration at the end of last
season. The winning selection for the
first work on the program was Rossini’s Overture
to La gazza ladra (The Thieving Magpie).
In
his introduction, Zimmermann told a story as riotously spirited as the overture
itself. He recounted how a certain Texas orchestra routinely started all of its
concerts with the U.S. National Anthem. Like the Rossini overture, it begins
with a military snare drum roll. But on the single occasion when the anthem was
dropped from the program, the orchestra instead launched immediately into the
Rossini overture. At the sound of the familiar drum roll, the audience
dutifully and promptly stood at attention, ready to sing. At the sound of the
second drum roll (the Rossini overture begins with three of them), the audience
just as promptly sat down, clearly perplexed.
The
raucous laughter elicited by Zimmermann’s storytelling was the perfect
overture, as it were, to the overture. Zimmermann’s reading of Rossini’s
rambunctious, spritely energy was in turn thoroughly enlivening, and the
orchestra responded in kind with captivating vivacity.
The atmosphere for the remainder of the
evening shifted progressively into a more searing emotional climate, beginning with
Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor. Right from the opening moments of the
turbulent first movement, guest soloist Sara Davis Buechner was clearly caught
up in the work’s dramatic thrall. As if animated by the spirit of Mozart
himself, she seemed to speak the music, breathing fresh new life into its many
contrasts of mood - alternately child-like, majestic and stormy, yet always
genuinely piquant.
Mozart’s
tight control of form and melody in this work is such that the soloist has
nowhere to hide. There are no overstated decorations, no allowances for
gratuitous pyrotechnics except, perhaps, in the first movement cadenza. Mozart
left none for this concerto. So here, Buechner’s own cadenza was a brilliant
convergence of astonishing technical prowess with riveting emotional thrust,
reminiscent of Beethoven at his most impassioned. And throughout the entire
work, the interplay between orchestra and pianist was superbly attuned to the
work’s utterly sublime clarity of texture.
Once again, Zimmermann addressed the
audience, expressing his surprise at the subscribers’ majority vote to hear the
evening’s final selection, Rachmaninoff’s Symphony
No. 1 in D minor. While he considered the evening’s first two choices “…rather
predictable,” he was flummoxed by this choice, adding, “I had thought you would
have selected Brahms’ Symphony No. 4.”
Flummoxed or not, Zimmermann poured himself into this
performance as surely as Rachmaninoff poured a plethora of musical ideas into
this quintessentially Russian symphony. Dazzlingly dramatic, the work is both a
collision and a melding of delicacy and sweetness with relentless bombast. The
orchestra rose to the event with a stunning display of razor-sharp clarity,
tender lyricism, and startlingly explosive power.
While this was certainly not a
go-gently-into-the-night finale, it was nonetheless an eminently memorable and
gratifying one.
Photo: Concert Pianist Sara Davis Buechner
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